Now & Again: Go-To Recipes, Inspired Menus + Endless Ideas for Reinventing Leftovers
By Julia Turshen and David Loftus
4.5/5
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About this ebook
• can't-get-enough-of-it recipes
• inspiring menus for social gatherings, holidays and more
• helpful timelines for flawlessly throwing a party
• oh-so-helpful "It's Me Again" recipes, which show how to use leftovers in new and delicious ways
• tips on how to be smartly thrifty with food choices
Now & Again will change the way we gather, eat, and think about leftovers, and, like the name suggests, you'll find yourself reaching for it time and time again.
Julia Turshen
Julia Turshen, a New York Times bestselling cookbook author and teaches cooking classes most Sunday afternoons. Her latest cookbook, Simply Julia, a national bestseller, is available wherever books are sold. Julia is also the author of Now & Again (named the Best Cookbook of 2018 by Amazon and an NPR ‘Great Read’), Feed the Resistance (named the Best Cookbook of 2017 by Eater), and Small Victories (named one of the Best Cookbooks of 2016 by the New York Times and NPR). She also hosts and produces the IACP-nominated podcast called ‘Keep Calm & Cook On.’ Julia lives in the Hudson Valley with her spouse Grace and their pets.
Read more from Julia Turshen
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Now & Again - Julia Turshen
INTRODUCTION
Now & Again has three goals.
One is to dismantle the idea that making a full meal has to be both difficult and expensive. The second is to show how leftovers can be an invitation to really fun, inventive cooking. The third and final is to make sure you have all of the tools you need—the inspiration and information—to gather people around your table because that is the best part about home cooking.
But first I owe you some full disclosure. Now & Again started as a completely different book. Based on my love of leftovers, I had an idea to write a book about reinventing them called . . . wait for it . . . It’s Me Again. Cooking with leftovers makes me so excited: you’re already halfway there! I was very thrilled about the idea. I was also sure it wasn’t enough. I wanted to give you not only ideas for how to reinvent leftovers but also recipes for what to make in the first place.
In thinking about what these recipes would be, I kept coming back to a question a lot of friends and family seemed to be asking me: what should I serve with it? This question also ties into what and how I really cook at home every day. I rarely ever cook just a single thing. Even if it’s just a salad next to a roast chicken or a toasted pita underneath scrambled eggs with a little yogurt spooned on top, I tend not to cook stand-alone recipes, but rather a few simple things that all complement one another and make the sum greater than the parts. I am all about what goes with what.
For me, creating menus isn’t about entertaining, which can feel intimidating. It’s about storytelling. There’s always something(s) alongside the main thing on my table. And it’s in the relationship those things share that full pictures get painted and stories are told. It could be as simple as meatballs with spaghetti, with maybe a little garlicky toast to sop up the sauce or a tangle of peppery arugula to add something green and to balance the whole thing. Each of those things is made better by the relationship it has with its friends. By assembling all of them, the meatballs and the salad and so on, I’m not just making food. I’m making a meal with a clear point of view and a story.
My forever goal for what I cook, eat, and for the recipes I write is to feel connected. I’m always searching for and celebrating this feeling. It doesn’t matter to me if it’s a fancy lobster dinner or an omelet at the diner (honestly, I prefer the latter). I am just as excited about the popcorn from the hardware store as I am about the spiciest fried chicken in Nashville, the most lovingly baked bread, and my family recipes handed down for generations. All of these things are connected to something. In preparing them and eating them, the experience becomes more than just food. It’s tied to a feeling.
Food, after all, isn’t just something we eat. It’s a lens through which we can understand ourselves and all of the folks that came before us. It’s also the lens through which we can, remarkably, better understand one another. Cooking is an easy way to connect with people, both those you know and those who are different from you, on a regular basis.
As a teenager, I wrote menus in the margins of my school notebooks. It was my favorite way to daydream. Those menus felt like little fantasies of the life I might one day lead, of the dishes I could make to celebrate special occasions and holidays, and of the ones I could stir up when comfort was needed. It was my way to imagine and connect with the world beyond my classroom. It was also a way to connect with myself and with the independent life I so very much wanted to live. As an adult, I can attest that bringing these menus to life for everyone I care so deeply about, and for all of the people I want to know better, gives me enormous joy and satisfaction.
This idea of connection, both with the dishes on the table and with the people sitting at it, is why I arranged this book by menus instead of stand-alone recipes. Some are incredibly easy, like the Simple Backpack Picnic Lunch on page 215 that is just sandwiches, some nectarines and nuts, and some cookies. It’s not much cooking. But it’s the perfect balance of things, each in relation to the other. It’s also tied to a memory, and it’s a way for me to evoke that memory. Food, in other words, is an effective way of chronicling life. For example, those particular sandwiches were the same ones my wife, Grace, and I had on a hike near our home in upstate New York. While I might not always immediately recall exactly where the trail was, I will always remember the sandwiches. And in remembering them, the whole day comes back to me.
Some menus in the book, like the one for Thanksgiving, are more involved. But no matter how few or how many components, each menu is built on food that’s entirely doable. There are also timetables for each menu, so it’s clear exactly what and how much you can make ahead, plus lots of thoughts throughout on things that go well with the menus that require no work whatsoever (like sometimes orange wedges are all you need after a big meal). There’s even a list of great things to delegate on page 278.
And then, It’s Me Again, which are all of the ways to reinvent the leftovers. Grace and I live in a small, rural town and eat almost all of our meals at home. Therefore, we always make a bit more than we can finish at a single sitting. Tomorrow’s meals are always informed by what’s left over from today and so on. It’s proven to be a really relaxing, effective cycle, and we’re always sure there’s something good to eat. All of the recipes in this book come from that similar place of plenty, from the feeling that there is more than enough. And where there is more than enough, there are leftovers. And where there are leftovers, there are endless opportunities for reinvention. These suggestions are some of the most fun parts of the book. They’re full of ideas for how to turn the leftovers into entirely new dishes that, as Grace says, don’t taste like the same thing again!
Note that all of these ideas for leftovers are applicable whether or not you made the original recipe. So, for example, if you’re staring at some cooked chicken in your refrigerator and are feeling uninspired, turn to the Coronation Chicken Salad on page 61, or take your seemingly boring leftover broccoli and make the Broccoli Fritters on page 113. All of the recipes are categorized by type at the back of the book (page 280) to make referencing them extra easy.
There are no rules here. The full menus are there if you’d like to follow them. But it’s also wonderful if you want to pick and choose recipes, maybe something from one menu paired with something from another. Or just make a single thing, call a friend to bring over a loaf of bread and a green salad, and call it a day. Whatever works for you works for me, so long as it means you’re happy in your kitchen and you’re providing yourself and the people you love with food that makes you all feel good.
Speaking of those people, one last thought from my friend and fellow cookbook author Nicole Taylor before we get into the kitchen. I was talking to her about how gathering people for a meal can make everyone feel connected and welcome and supported—all wonderful, positive things. And she asked me a question that fundamentally challenged and changed me: when was the last time you had more than one person around your dining table who didn’t look like you? Cooking for someone is a powerful thing to do. Invite someone new over. Connection and change happen at the table, and you’re all welcome at mine.
Autumn
SUNDAY MORNING
BANGLADESHI BREAKFAST
RED-CHECKERED TABLECLOTH
LATE SATURDAY LUNCH
CARD NIGHT ENCHILADAS
ROSH HASHANAH DINNER
NO STRESS THANKSGIVING
Sunday Morning Bangladeshi Breakfast
SCRAMBLED EGGS WITH CILANTRO + COCONUT CHUTNEY
WHOLE WHEAT + CUMIN FLATBREADS
MANGO WITH CARDAMOM SYRUP + PISTACHIOS
A few years ago, I got to work on The Hot Bread Kitchen Cookbook, a collection of recipes and stories from New York’s Hot Bread Kitchen bakery. An intensive workforce development program that trains immigrant women facing economic insecurity, Hot Bread Kitchen offers bakers not only on-the-job skills but also all of the tools (like an English-as-a-second-language program and management lessons) they need to launch their own careers in food. In a beautiful, full-circle kind of way, all of the breads and baked goods the bakery produces are influenced by the women and the places they are from.
Working on the book not only taught me about great baking, from challah to m’smen, but also introduced me to some incredible people, including the unforgettable Lutfunnessa Islam. Born and raised in Bangladesh, Lutfunnessa was a political science teacher before immigrating to America, where she became a mother and then a trainee at Hot Bread Kitchen. She is now a production supervisor, trains new bakers, and also oversees the bakery’s stand at the Jackson Heights Greenmarket (in Queens, one of the most culturally diverse neighborhoods in New York City, not to mention the country). Lutfunnessa is a ray of clever, fun light, and I really enjoyed getting to know her while working on the book.
One especially memorable morning, I left my apartment around 5:30 a.m. to meet her at the bakery, and she taught me to make chapattis, the thin unleavened whole wheat flatbreads she had learned from her mother, followed by her perfect curried vegetables and stewed beef. Writing cookbooks is always a lot of fun, but sometimes it feels especially meaningful.
If you ever find yourself in Jackson Heights on a Sunday morning, go watch Lutfunnessa do her thing at the greenmarket. A true showwoman, she sells out of everything. Whenever I would go to see her there, I would always get lots of stuff like eggs and fresh herbs to bring home for making a breakfast I hoped she would approve of. Here it is.
UP TO 1 MONTH AHEAD
Make the flatbread dough, dust it with flour, wrap it in plastic wrap, place it in an airtight freezer bag, and freeze. Defrost in the refrigerator overnight and then let it come to room temperature before rolling out and cooking.
Make the cardamom syrup and store in a tightly capped jar in the refrigerator.
UP TO 1 WEEK AHEAD
Make the chutney and store in a tightly capped jar in the refrigerator.
UP TO 1 DAY AHEAD
Make and cook the flatbreads, wrap them in aluminum foil, and keep at room temperature. Warm them in a 300°F [150°C] oven (still wrapped in the foil) before serving. Or remove the foil, wrap the breads in a damp paper towel, and microwave for about 30 seconds before serving. Alternatively, make the dough and divide into portions as directed. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for up to 24 hours, then let the dough come to room temperature, roll it out, and cook just before serving.
The mangoes can be sliced and dressed with the syrup, then covered and refrigerated until serving.
LAST MOMENT
When your guests arrive, scramble the eggs, cook (or just warm) the flatbreads, and sprinkle the pistachios on the mangoes.
Scrambled Eggs with Cilantro + Coconut Chutney
Scrambled eggs are probably what I eat most frequently, but they aren’t much to write home about. This chutney is. It takes the eggs from ordinary to remarkable, and, here’s the best part, it is as easy as throwing a bunch of things into a food processor and pressing the button. There’s no cooking, just combining. It keeps well in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to a week (it gets quite a bit thicker and loses a bit of its fresh, herby brightness, but it is still great), and it’s also good on roast chicken, grilled fish, broiled lamb, griddled halloumi cheese, or roasted sweet potatoes. If you don’t like cilantro, substitute fresh mint.
SERVES 4
2 large handfuls of fresh cilantro leaves (a little bit of stem is fine!)
1 Tbsp peeled and minced or grated fresh ginger
¹/2 tsp cumin seeds or ground cumin
¹/2 cup [35 g] unsweetened flaked dried coconut
1¹/2 tsp kosher salt
¹/4 cup [60 ml] coconut milk (full-fat or low-fat coconut milk will work)
1¹/2 tsp fresh lime juice
8 eggs
2 Tbsp unsalted butter
In a food processor, combine the cilantro, ginger, cumin, dried coconut, and ¹/2 tsp salt and pulse until the cilantro is finely chopped. Add the coconut milk and lime juice and pulse just to combine (you want the chutney to have a little texture, rather than be totally smooth). Set the chutney aside.
Crack the eggs into a large bowl and whisk until the whites and yolks are well blended. Add the remaining salt and whisk one more time.
In a large nonstick skillet over medium heat, melt the butter. Add the eggs and cook, stirring gently with a wooden spoon or heat-resistant spatula, until they are as set as you like them to be.
Transfer the eggs to a large platter. Serve the chutney either spooned on top or in a bowl on the side.
Whole Wheat + Cumin Flatbreads
These flatbreads are a great introduction to making bread at home. It’s a really forgiving recipe and incorporates some of the chapatti lessons I learned from Lutfunnessa, including how to make breads with all whole wheat flour that aren’t too dense and how to cook them in a hot skillet, instead of in the oven, for ease, speed, and great charred flavor. If you don’t love cumin, feel free to leave it out or to substitute another spice, such as fennel or caraway seeds. You could also add a handful of roughly chopped fresh cilantro to the dough.
SERVES 4
1 tsp active dry yeast (about ¹/2 standard packet)
¹/4 cup [60 ml] water, warmed to body temperature
¹/2 cup [120 g] plain full-fat Greek yogurt
1¹/2 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted and cooled
1¹/2 tsp kosher salt
1 tsp sugar
¹/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cumin seeds or ground cumin
1¹/4 cups [175 g] whole wheat flour, plus a bit more if needed
Check the expiration date on your yeast and make sure you’re in the clear. Put the yeast and water into a large bowl and stir to combine. Let the mixture sit until the yeast is dissolved and the mixture is cloudy (almost like miso soup), about 5 minutes. A few tiny bubbles might appear on the surface, which is great, but it’s also okay if they don’t.
Add the yogurt, 1 Tbsp of the butter, the salt, sugar, baking soda, and cumin seeds and stir well to combine. The baking soda might cause the mixture to fizz a little, which just means it’s working, so no need to worry. Add the flour and stir with a wooden spoon until everything comes together to form a dough (it will be sticky). If some of the flour doesn’t mix in immediately, get in there with your hands and mix until it is absorbed.
Knead the dough in the bowl (press it with the heel of your hand and push it away from you, then immediately pull it back, folding the top back onto itself) for about 3 minutes. The dough should be nice and smooth and, honestly, it won’t feel or look all that different from when you started kneading. But the kneading will help the gluten get going, and that’s important to do, so please don’t skip this step. If the dough sticks to your hands a lot as you’re kneading, simply dust it with a little more flour.
Drizzle the dough with the remaining ¹/2 Tbsp butter. Turn the dough to coat it with the butter and then cover the bowl with a kitchen towel. Set the dough aside to rise until it’s soft, puffy, and slightly larger than when you first set it aside, about 1 hour. If there’s a warm spot in your kitchen, put it there (inside a turned-off microwave is good).
Transfer the rested dough back to a clean work surface and use a knife to cut it into four equal pieces. Roll each piece into a small ball, then use a rolling pin to roll it out into a thin oval that measures about 6 in [15 cm] long. You shouldn’t need any extra flour for this, but if the dough is sticking to the work surface or the rolling pin, dust it very lightly with flour.
Place a large cast-iron skillet over medium-high heat and let it get nice and hot. Place a flatbread in the hot pan and cook until the underside is nicely browned and charred in spots, 1 to 2 minutes. Flip the flatbread and cook until the second side is nicely browned, about 1 minute. (You can also use a stainless-steel skillet, but you might need to add a minute of cooking on one or both sides.)
Transfer the cooked flatbread to a warm platter or a napkin-lined basket to keep it warm, then repeat the process with the rest of the dough pieces. Serve the breads while still warm.
Mango with Cardamom Syrup + Pistachios
Although there’s often nothing better than ripe fruit served without fanfare, everything likes to be dressed up now and then. The combination of cardamom syrup and toasted pistachios is super simple and takes plain mango from uneventful to gorgeous, with flavors that are wonderful together. If you like the flavor of cardamom, make a double batch of the syrup and use it in your hot or iced tea for a chai-ish vibe.
SERVES 4
6 green cardamom pods, crushed, or ¹/2 tsp ground cardamom
Pinch of kosher salt
3 Tbsp packed light brown sugar
3 Tbsp water
2 large or 3 medium ripe, juicy mangoes, peeled, pitted, and sliced
3 Tbsp shelled pistachios, toasted and roughly chopped
In a small saucepan over medium heat, combine the cardamom, salt, brown sugar, and water. Bring to a boil, stirring to dissolve the sugar, about 1 minute. Turn off the heat and let the mixture cool to room temperature. Pour the syrup through a fine-mesh sieve into a small pitcher.
Arrange the mango slices artfully—but not too preciously—on a serving platter. Drizzle the cardamom syrup evenly over the slices and then sprinkle with the pistachios. Serve immediately or store for up to 1 day, covered and refrigerated.
It’s Me Again
CURRIED SCRAMBLED EGG SALAD
Leftover scrambled eggs can be turned into egg salad. Let them cool to room temperature (which they probably already are if they’re left over), put them into a bowl, and break them up with a spoon. Add a good shake of curry powder and then bind with as much mayonnaise as you like (egg salad is a very personal thing). Or you can use half mayonnaise and half plain Greek yogurt if you want to lighten things a bit. Taste and adjust the seasoning with salt and curry powder if needed. You can also add a big spoonful of the Cilantro + Coconut Chutney (or maybe it was already on the eggs, in which case, you’re set). Delicious served on well-toasted leftover flatbreads or pita breads.
FLATBREAD PIZZA
Warm the flatbread in a microwave (wrap the bread in a damp paper towel) or toaster oven for about 30 seconds and then dress with toppings (perhaps tomato sauce and shredded mozzarella; ricotta, roasted garlic, and some sautéed spinach; or maybe spicy tomato sauce with thinly sliced prosciutto . . . whatever you like!). Broil in your toaster oven or regular oven until the toppings are melted, bubbling, and/or browned. Serve warm.
MANGO CHUTNEY
Combine a finely chopped red onion, about 1 Tbsp peeled and minced or grated fresh ginger, a minced garlic clove, and a little fat (olive oil, coconut oil, unsalted butter, or ghee would work equally well) in a medium skillet. Season with